Start or stop saving passwords

By default, Chrome offers to save your password. You can turn this option off or on at any time.

On your computer, open Chrome.

At the top right, click Profile Passwords .

Turn Offer to save passwords on or off.

Check or change your passwords

You may get an alert from Chrome if you use a password and username combination that has been compromised in a data leak on a third party website or app. Compromised password and username combinations are unsafe because they’ve been published online.

We recommend that you change any compromised passwords as soon as you can. You can follow the instructions in Chrome to change your password on the site where you’ve used that password, and check your saved passwords for any other site the password may be saved on.

Chrome makes sure that your passwords and username are protected so they can’t be read by Google.

Important: You must be signed-in to Chrome to get these notifications.

To start or stop getting these notifications:

On your computer, open Chrome.

At the top right, click More Settings.

Under "Privacy and security," click “Warn you if passwords are exposed in a data breach” on or off.

Important: This feature is only available if you have turned “Safe Browsing” on.

Fix problems with passwords

How Chrome saves and syncs passwords

How Chrome saves your passwords depends on whether you want to store and use them across devices. When synced, passwords can be used on Chrome on all your devices, and across some apps on your Android devices.